7th Grade Summarizing Practice RI.7.2 Why Friendships Change in Middle School?
Your Students Can Retell a Passage Just Fine. Summarizing It Is a Completely Different Skill.
A high-interest passage about why friendships change in middle school — built to move students past retelling and into true RI.7.2 summarizing.
Add to CartFriendship changes in middle school is something every 7th grader is already living. That engagement is what makes the skill practice stick — especially for ADHD learners and reluctant readers who shut down with low-interest texts.
The real problem this resource fixes
Retelling and summarizing are not the same skill — and most students don't know the difference
Retelling (what most students do)
- Repeats everything they read in order
- Includes minor details that don't matter
- Reflects one part of the passage, not the whole
- Includes personal reactions and opinions
Summarizing (what RI.7.2 requires)
- Identifies two or more central ideas
- Tracks how ideas develop across the full text
- Separates key details from minor information
- Remains objective — no opinions or reactions
Why friendships — why this works
Summarizing practice fails when students don't care about the text
They stay in the passage
Friendship changes in middle school is something 7th graders are already thinking about. They read carefully because they genuinely want to understand what the text is saying.
Their answers reflect actual thinking
When students are engaged, you get real data on the skill — not disengaged guessing from a student who checked out before the first paragraph.
Especially effective for ADHD learners
Students who shut down with low-interest texts stay engaged when the topic is personally relevant. The topic does the motivational work so the skill can do its job.
Works for reluctant readers too
Personal relevance removes the first barrier. Students who resist informational text will read this one — because they recognize themselves in it.
Retelling vs. summarizing — the four breakdowns
Every question targets one of these exact struggles
Identifying more than one central idea
7th grade requires two or more central ideas — not one. Most students have never been asked to hold multiple ideas at once and track how they connect.
Understanding how ideas develop across the full text
RI.7.2 asks students to analyze development — not just find the central idea in the first paragraph and stop reading carefully.
Separating important ideas from minor details
Students who retell include everything. Summarizing requires decisions about what matters most — a skill that has to be taught explicitly.
Avoiding the retelling trap
Strong distractors are written to sound like good summaries — but they retell instead of summarize. Students must understand the difference to answer correctly.
What's included
5 student pages, fully ready to use
High-interest nonfiction passage
Why friendships change in middle school — written at 7th grade level, personally relevant, zero prep.
10 multiple choice questions
RI.7.2 focused, no patterns or obvious answers. Strong test-prep level distractors with balanced answer choices.
Expanded answer key
Explanations for every answer choice — not just the correct one — so you can coach reasoning, not just mark answers.
Print and digital friendly
Works in the classroom, at home, or on a screen. Use it however your student or class needs it.
What this does for teachers and parents
Built to work for everyone in the room
For classroom teachers
Quickly identify whether students understand central ideas versus details — without creating anything from scratch. The expanded answer explanations do the reteaching work for you.
For homeschool parents
Clear structure, no prep, and answer explanations that make it easy to support your student even if ELA isn't your strongest subject. Everything you need is already here.
For students
Learn what makes a summary complete versus incomplete — and practice choosing answers that reflect the entire passage, not just the part they remember best.
Perfect for
Use it however you need it
Standards alignment
Exactly what RI.7.2 asks for
Determine two or more central ideas in a text and analyze their development over the course of the text; provide an objective summary of the text.
Summarizing informational text · Central idea identification · Retelling versus summarizing
Complete the grade-band series
Scaffold down or extend up
The topic gets them in. The questions show you exactly where the skill breaks down.
No prep. No planning. Just a passage they'll actually read — and the data you need to know what to teach next.
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